streams/drainage

Streams and Drainage


see also free on-line course When Good Rivers Turn Bad (contents)
see also contents of entire Earth and Beyond Course


Streams
Geometry and Dynamics of Stream Channels
Base Level
Velocity
Discharge
Load
Bed Load
Dissolved Load
Changes Downstream
Channel Patterns
Straight Channels
Meandering Channels
Braided Channels
Erosion by Streams
Stream Deposits
Terraces
Alluvial Fans
Deltas
Drainage Systems
Stream Order
Drainage Patterns


adapted to HTML from lecture notes of Prof. Stephen A. Nelson Tulane University

 


Streams

A stream is a body of water that carries rock particles and dissolved ions and flows down slope along a clearly defined path, called a channel. Thus streams may vary in width from a few centimeters to several kilometers. Streams are important for several reasons:

  • Streams carry most of the water that goes from the land to the sea, and thus are an important part of the water cycle.

  • Streams carry billions of tons of sediment to lower elevations, and thus are one of the main transporting mediums in the production of sedimentary rocks.

  • Streams carry dissolved ions, the products of chemical weathering, into the oceans and thus make the sea salty.

  • saltation.gif
















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